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  2. Carboniferous - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carboniferous

    Carboniferous is the period during which both terrestrial animal and land plant life was well established. [10] Stegocephalia (four-limbed vertebrates including true tetrapods), whose forerunners (tetrapodomorphs) had evolved from lobe-finned fish during the preceding Devonian period, became pentadactylous during the Carboniferous. [11]

  3. Coal forest - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coal_forest

    The Carboniferous rainforest collapse was caused by a cooler drier climate that initially fragmented, then collapsed the rainforest ecosystem. [2] During most of the rest of Carboniferous times, the coal forests were mainly restricted to refugia in North America (such as the Appalachian and Illinois coal basins) and central Europe.

  4. Mazon Creek fossil beds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mazon_Creek_fossil_beds

    The Mazon Creek fossils are found in the Upper Carboniferous Francis Creek Shale. [6] The type locality is the Mazon River (or Mazon Creek), a tributary of the Illinois River near Morris, Grundy County, Illinois. The 25 to 30 meters of shale were formed approximately , during the Pennsylvanian period.

  5. Category:Carboniferous animals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Carboniferous_animals

    Category: Carboniferous animals. 19 languages. ... Prehistoric animals of the Carboniferous period, during the Paleozoic Era Subcategories. This category has the ...

  6. Pennsylvanian (geology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pennsylvanian_(geology)

    The Late Carboniferous a Time of Great Coal Swamps, Paleomap project. World map from this time period. The Carboniferous – 354 to 290 Million Years Ago, University of California Museum of Paleontology. Information on stratigraphies, localities, tectonics, and life. The Pennsylvanian Epoch of the Carboniferous Period: 318 to 299 Mya, Paleos.com

  7. Arthropleura - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthropleura

    Arthropleura (Greek for 'jointed ribs') is an extinct genus of massive myriapod that lived in what is now Europe and North America around 345 to 290 million years ago, [2] [4] from the Viséan stage of the lower Carboniferous Period to the Sakmarian stage of the lower Permian Period.

  8. Meganeura - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meganeura

    Meganeura is a genus of extinct insects from the Late Carboniferous (approximately 300 million years ago). It is a member of the extinct order Meganisoptera, which are closely related to and resemble dragonflies and damselflies (with dragonflies, damselflies and meganisopterans being part of the broader group Odonatoptera).

  9. Category:Carboniferous life - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Carboniferous_life

    Prehistoric life of the Carboniferous period, the geologic time between 358.9 and 298.9 million years ago, during the Paleozoic Era See also the preceding Category:Devonian life and the succeeding Category:Permian life